M5StickC: turn off screen completely
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To be tested but I think this turns off OLED_VDD, ie the current to the OLED. Register 10H is said to be for OLED_VPP so setting it to zero could help too.
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I did a simple test: with only REG 28H the screen stays slightly warm. With both 28H and 10H, the screen cools off after a while. Hardly a scientific test, I know, but seems to point to the need to set both registers.
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@dda what a wonderful work you have done! I hope this will enable @Multihelix to use M5StickC as a watch (turn off OLED after a timeout and turn on OLED on button press or accelerometer)
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How are you getting 5 hours of life? it seems you would need <16 ma total drain
Are you sleeping the ESP32?
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@ws1088 Funny enough I bought my M5StickC with the watch strap and all, but not because I wanted a watch – I don't wear them – but because it enables me to tie it up to my backpack when I do LoRa range tests :-)
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@dda said in M5StickC: turn off screen completely:
@ws1088 Funny enough I bought my M5StickC with the watch strap and all, but not because I wanted a watch – I don't wear them – but because it enables me to tie it up to my backpack when I do LoRa range tests :-)
why would you use m5stickc to do LoRa range tests? You can get LoRa chip with OLED screen. Do you connect m5stickc to a LoRa chip via I2C? or WiFi AP?
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I have a lot of different LoRa chips and setups. I have one board, at 230 MHz, that I can connect through the hat connector (I need 3 pins + Vcc/GND). I have transceivers, both at 230 and 433 MHz, I connect to via RS485 (I bought a hat for that, and also some RS485 for my M5Stack cores). etc etc. The smaller the better :-)
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@maxstack - Yes, I used ESP DeepSleep set to wake on Button A being pressed, but I would say that the 5 hour time was not under ideal conditions, as I occasionally woke up the device to confirm it was still working and to check the time - a resonable activity for a watch.
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@multihelix Can you post a link to your watch code?
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@dda said in M5StickC: turn off screen completely:
I did a simple test: with only REG 28H the screen stays slightly warm. With both 28H and 10H, the screen cools off after a while. Hardly a scientific test, I know, but seems to point to the need to set both registers.
I'm looking at this thread to hopefully implement a complete screen turn off, but am not sure what register mask to use (based on quoted post)
Here is what I have, the screen is off but hard to know if the screen has actually been disabled.
void turnOffScreen() {
Wire1.beginTransmission(0x34);
Wire1.write(0x10);
Wire1.write(0b00000000); // 7-3=? | 2=EXTEN | 1=? | 0=DC-DC2
Wire1.endTransmission();Wire1.begin(21, 22);
Wire1.beginTransmission(0x34);
Wire1.write(0x12);
Wire1.write(0b01001011); // 7=? | 6=EXTEN | 5=? | 4=DC-DC2 | 3=LDO3 | 2=LDO2 | 1=DC-DC3 | 0=DC-DC1
Wire1.endTransmission();Wire1.beginTransmission(0x34);
Wire1.write(0x28);
Wire1.write(0b00001111); // 7-4=LDO2 | 3-0=LDO3
Wire1.endTransmission();
} -
@klimbot: I think you have to turn LDO3 and LDO2 off, in your code only LDO2 is off. Take a look at this picture: https://docs.m5stack.com/assets/img/product_pics/core/minicore/m5stickc/m5stickc_05.webp
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This is how I init my M5StickC in a full black screen way.
M5.begin(0,1,1); M5.Axp.SetLDO2(false); M5.Axp.SetLDO3(false);